Abstract
One unprobed strand of Canada-U.S. racial history demanding examination and explanation is law's obfuscated role of collusion with race—a role that more often than not has aided and abetted racism and racial discrimination. Knowledge of this historical complicity and duplicity between law and race constitutes a precondition for understanding the material reality of the racism that daily blights and scars the lifescapes of Blacks in Canada today. Diasporic literacy demands that we start opening up the Canadian record so as to better comprehend how law as an institution has so often behaved with impunity and continues to operate as if there were nothing about Black people worth honoring! Though in matters of racism and racial discrimination we in Canada have experienced the law too often as a sword of oppression and so seldom as a shield of protection, law nevertheless remains too precious a tool for Black people to abandon.
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